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Home » Life in Holland, Nature » Our visit to Oostvaardersplassen

Our visit to Oostvaardersplassen


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Posted on Friday, March 16th, 2007 at 11:56 pm CET

Last weekend we went to Flevoland for a day to hike and watch birds at Oostvaardersplassen. The weather was beautiful and there were many people out and about walking and bicycling. We saw Red Deer, Konik wild horses and several new birds.

Flevoland is the Netherlands’ 12th province, located in the center of the country at the location of the former Zuiderzee. The province was established in 1986 after it was successfully reclaimed from the sea in 1968. The Oostvaardersplassen is a landscape of shallow pools, islets and swamps. Originally, this low part of the new polder was destined to become an industrial area. Spontaneous settlement of interesting flora & fauna turned the area into a successful nature park.

On this Google map you can see the outline of Flevoland and the arrow indicates the Oostvaardersplassen.

Flevoland satellite photo

The Oostvaardersplassen are home to hundreds of wild horses, the Konik. They were released to keep the landscape open and alter it to produce more park-like forest. We saw dozens of them roaming around the swamps.

Konik at Oostvaardersplassen

On the 5-km trail (Zeearendroute) near the visitor center, we saw many fallen trees from the heavy storm earlier this year, and a lot of the bark had been eaten from the trees by Red Deer. The bare trunks were covered with teeth scratches. A couple of minutes later we saw a buck Red Deer munch away on some bark just 50 meters away from us. With him was his herd of 5 or 6 females. Later we saw some other groups of deer.

Red Deer at Oostvaardersplassen

The area is also home to a pair of White-tailed Eagles that successfully nested last year, the first recorded case in the Netherlands, although it is thought that these birds probably nested here centuries ago. White-tailed Eagles showed up fairly quickly after the wetlands were established, but it wasn’t until last year, decades later, that they produced offspring. The nest is inaccessible to the public, but a camera was placed by the nest and live images can be viewed at the visitor center. We saw one the eagles sit on her nest on the screen. She had laid an egg the day before:

Television with live images of nesting White-tailed Eagles

We saw a lot of birds this day, including Skylark, Long-tailed Tit, Goosander and this cute little Reed Bunting:

Television with live images of nesting White-tailed Eagles

 

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